Berliner Boersenzeitung - Prince Harry's battle against Murdoch UK tabloids goes to trial

EUR -
AED 4.240468
AFN 72.164587
ALL 96.012517
AMD 436.929424
ANG 2.066521
AOA 1058.81729
ARS 1611.354845
AUD 1.619726
AWG 2.081264
AZN 1.968381
BAM 1.955037
BBD 2.322193
BDT 141.964578
BGN 1.902461
BHD 0.435943
BIF 3443.285575
BMD 1.154654
BND 1.475837
BOB 8.002876
BRL 5.953862
BSD 1.159048
BTN 106.674355
BWP 15.538934
BYN 3.421564
BYR 22631.222857
BZD 2.323793
CAD 1.570081
CDF 2514.837045
CHF 0.902823
CLF 0.026273
CLP 1037.561055
CNY 7.928145
CNH 7.929345
COP 4278.063192
CRC 546.100993
CUC 1.154654
CUP 30.598337
CVE 110.22197
CZK 24.417459
DJF 206.389426
DKK 7.472189
DOP 70.324373
DZD 152.355696
EGP 60.575011
ERN 17.319813
ETB 179.480917
FJD 2.540589
FKP 0.861479
GBP 0.862521
GEL 3.134889
GGP 0.861479
GHS 12.558097
GIP 0.861479
GMD 84.86956
GNF 10161.209107
GTQ 8.886531
GYD 242.835198
HKD 9.037537
HNL 30.680687
HRK 7.530998
HTG 152.083262
HUF 387.745012
IDR 19507.883172
ILS 3.599005
IMP 0.861479
INR 106.456291
IQD 1518.11669
IRR 1526193.091324
ISK 144.597138
JEP 0.861479
JMD 181.54991
JOD 0.818652
JPY 183.372967
KES 149.123536
KGS 100.974258
KHR 4652.264357
KMF 491.882439
KPW 1039.227134
KRW 1710.489929
KWD 0.354202
KYD 0.965702
KZT 569.216299
LAK 24826.190309
LBP 103848.45796
LKR 360.294097
LRD 212.097198
LSL 18.977008
LTL 3.409393
LVL 0.698439
LYD 7.372122
MAD 10.850864
MDL 19.987197
MGA 4805.124098
MKD 61.562182
MMK 2424.797186
MNT 4122.280822
MOP 9.342679
MRU 46.281134
MUR 53.009963
MVR 17.83995
MWK 2009.715415
MXN 20.488814
MYR 4.534297
MZN 73.793847
NAD 18.977008
NGN 1613.455832
NIO 42.654087
NOK 11.166081
NPR 170.6838
NZD 1.958184
OMR 0.443963
PAB 1.159048
PEN 3.972249
PGK 4.994115
PHP 68.621207
PKR 323.859866
PLN 4.26251
PYG 7512.067318
QAR 4.22615
RON 5.09321
RSD 117.424881
RUB 91.594945
RWF 1693.63881
SAR 4.332832
SBD 9.289404
SCR 16.15889
SDG 693.947308
SEK 10.707221
SGD 1.472831
SHP 0.86629
SLE 28.395119
SLL 24212.521072
SOS 661.244716
SRD 43.268933
STD 23899.01127
STN 24.490757
SVC 10.139768
SYP 128.024988
SZL 18.975592
THB 36.829424
TJS 11.109263
TMT 4.04129
TND 3.396674
TOP 2.780131
TRY 50.938484
TTD 7.863942
TWD 36.724703
TZS 3007.874511
UAH 51.095453
UGX 4282.328195
USD 1.154654
UYU 46.621799
UZS 14079.73521
VES 505.342782
VND 30338.539825
VUV 138.094479
WST 3.134221
XAF 655.701017
XAG 0.013288
XAU 0.000223
XCD 3.120511
XCG 2.088622
XDR 0.814935
XOF 655.701017
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.503921
ZAR 19.114822
ZMK 10393.272167
ZMW 22.543199
ZWL 371.79819
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3300

    17.35

    -1.9%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    23.24

    -0.04%

  • CMSD

    0.0700

    23.15

    +0.3%

  • GSK

    -0.1700

    55.15

    -0.31%

  • NGG

    -0.1600

    89.69

    -0.18%

  • RIO

    0.4000

    92.08

    +0.43%

  • BCE

    -0.5000

    25.89

    -1.93%

  • BTI

    -0.2500

    59.16

    -0.42%

  • AZN

    -1.6800

    193.31

    -0.87%

  • VOD

    -0.0600

    14.4

    -0.42%

  • RELX

    -0.4300

    34.76

    -1.24%

  • BP

    1.6200

    41.56

    +3.9%

  • JRI

    0.2100

    12.85

    +1.63%

  • BCC

    -0.6400

    71.9

    -0.89%

Prince Harry's battle against Murdoch UK tabloids goes to trial
Prince Harry's battle against Murdoch UK tabloids goes to trial / Photo: Ben Stansall - AFP

Prince Harry's battle against Murdoch UK tabloids goes to trial

Prince Harry's hotly anticipated lawsuit trial against a British tabloid publisher alleging it carried out unlawful information gathering will start Tuesday, after years of legal wrangling during which dozens of other claimants settled.

Text size:

Harry, King Charles III's youngest son, claims private investigators working for two tabloids owned by Rupert Murdoch's News Group Newspapers (NGN) repeatedly targeted him unlawfully more than a decade ago.

It is one of several lawsuits the 40-year-old has pursued against UK newspaper publishers, with the California-based royal winning a phone hacking case against Mirror Group Newspapers (MGN) just over a year ago.

The High Court claim against NGN does not encompass phone hacking allegations, after judge Timothy Fancourt previously ruled the prince had run out of legal time to pursue that claim.

The only other remaining claimant in the case is Tom Watson, a former deputy leader of the ruling Labour party who now sits in the House of Lords.

The pair accuse The Sun and now-shuttered News of the World of using unlawful newsgathering techniques to generate stories about them more than a decade ago, and that NGN executives deliberately covered up their practices by deleting emails.

Watson also alleges his phone was hacked between 2009 and 2011, when he was investigating Murdoch's tabloids as an MP on a watchdog committee.

- Cover-up claims -

NGN denies all the allegations, calling the cover-up claim "wrong" and "unsustainable".

During the trial -- expected to last up to 10 weeks -- NGN will call "a number of witnesses including technologists, lawyers and senior staff to defeat the claim," a spokesperson said.

Harry, who quit being a working royal in 2020 and settled in the United States with his wife Meghan, has long blamed the paparazzi for the 1997 death of his mother, Princess Diana, in a car chase in Paris.

He is due to give evidence at the trial, to back up claims against the two tabloids covering a 15-year period from 1996.

The prince, whose formal title is the Duke of Sussex, became the first senior British royal to give evidence in a witness box in 2023, when he testified against MGN.

Fancourt, who also presided over that case, eventually ruled in the prince's favour, concluding phone hacking had been "widespread and habitual" at MGN titles in the late 1990s and the duke's phone had been tapped to a "modest extent".

Widespread phone hacking allegations against a number of British tabloids emerged in the late 2000s, prompting the launch of a public inquiry into UK press culture.

NGN apologised at the time for unlawful practices at the News of the World and closed it in 2011, while denying similar claims against The Sun and suggestions of a corporate cover-up.

It has since settled cases brought by some 1,300 claimants.

The publisher has paid out around £1 billion ($1.2 billion) including legal costs, according to British media, and never seen a case go to trial.

- 'Accountability' -

That has prompted criticism that England's civil litigation system favours deep-pocketed defendants who leave claimants with little choice but to settle.

Various high-profile figures who made claims against NGN, including Harry's brother and heir-to-the-throne Prince William and actor Hugh Grant, have settled in recent years.

Grant, a long-time critic of Britain's tabloids, revealed last year he had opted against a trial because it could land him with costs approaching £10 million even if he won.

Under litigation rules, if a claimant refuses a settlement and a judge awards a lower sum after a trial, the claimant must pay both sides' legal costs.

Harry has shown no sign of wanting to settle in a legal battle Fancourt said in an October ruling "at times resembles more an entrenched front in a campaign between two obdurate but well resourced armies".

The British royal told a New York Times event last month that his goal is "accountability".

His battle with an arm of Murdoch's media empire appears highly personal, with Harry describing the 93-year-old mogul as "evil" in his 2023 memoir "Spare".

"I couldn't think of a single human being in the 300,000-year history of the species who'd done more damage to our collective sense of reality," he wrote.

(P.Werner--BBZ)